Alien exodus: Hundreds to be sent home from Moscow camp for illegal migrants

Moscow authorities have pledged to extradite by Saturday a third of some 600 illegal migrant workers that have been kept in a temporary camp since their workplaces were raided by police. Migration officials say they aim to close down the camp this week.

Of the 584 people being held at the migrant camp in Moscow’s
Golyanovo district, 560 are Vietnamese nationals. Other foreign
job seekers came from Egypt, Syria, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, and
Azerbaijan. Two detained Syrians exercised their right to apply
for asylum, as authorities took the situation of their home
country into account.

The first group, consisting of 30 Vietnamese workers, was
deported on Saturday. The rest are scheduled to be sent home by
the end of August.

All of the migrants were arrested in recent police raids at their
places of employment. One such raid saw 1,200 illegal Vietnamese
workers detained at a complex of small workshops.

“We were working and then all of a sudden police rushed in and
detained us,” illegal migrant worker Rustam told RT’s Egor
Piskunov.

Russia’s Interior Ministry said the operation found workers and
their families living in unsanitary conditions, and that the tent
camp and field kitchen were promptly built to house and feed the
detainees ahead of their deportation hearings.

News of the ‘tent town’ of detained foreign workers sparked
reaction from human rights groups and prompted authorities to
assure the public that they are closely monitoring the situation
at the camp. Russian consumer rights watchdog Rospotrebnadzor has
detected and advised on sanitation violations at the site, but
rejected reports of a raging camp epidemic.

Although still held in tents, some may argue that the detained
may find their conditions to be better than before, due to the
fact that hot meals are served three times a day – and they don’t
have to do hours of hard manual labor in hidden underground
facilities to earn them.

The camp was inspected on Sunday by a politician from the liberal
Yabloko party, Sergey Mitrokhin. He stated that he did not
discover any human rights violations at the camp.

While police raids on migrant workers reportedly continue,
authorities say those inviting the migrants to work as ‘cheap
laborers’ - as well as those sheltering them - are also being
investigated.

There are around three million illegal immigrants working in
Russia, according to migration officials. However, independent
studies show much higher figures. As a way to save money and cut
down on hassle, many companies prefer to hire migrants instead of
Russian citizens, who are entitled to social benefits.